Aggressive people are always coping with issues within themselves. Their aggression, rage, and abusive behavior are driven primarily by unconscious defensiveness. Managing high conflict people can be very difficult. Especially if youโre in a relationship with one, it gets really tough to resolve issues with your high conflict partner. Here are some 7 tips for dealing with aggressive people.
Individuals who are aggressive thrive on provoking and escalating conflict. Theyโre usually domineering and try to control the conversation. Theyโre distrustful, reactive, highly defensive, intense, dogmatic, and often, though not always, loud. Theyโre not open to alternative points of view but are more invested in enhancing their power at your expense than listening to your point of view or even considering the facts.
They feel right and blameless, and youโre the one who is wrong and to blame. Disagreements quickly stray from the issues at hand and turn into personal attacks. They often engage in lying, making threats, false accusations, spreading rumors, or cutting off communication, and some are violent. You likely feel angry or anxious around them.
When you spot signs of such aggressive behavior, itโs best to avoid close relationships with them, because you will eventually be targeted.
What Drives Highly Aggressive People
Aggressive people are highly defensive and use aggression as a defense. They donโt like to be vulnerable and open, and they use their aggressive defenses as self-protection. Theyโre driven to be aggressive by unconscious forces that make them feel insecure.
Basically, they have an inner war going on, but externalize it out into the world. This explains why they might provoke conflict for no apparent reason. The cause has nothing to do with you but what theyโre feeling inside. Aggression makes them feel safe and powerful. theyโve suffered trauma in childhood, but heredity may also be a factor.
Many aggressive people have Cluster B personality disorders due to their erratic, dramatic, and emotional behavior. Their personality traits started in childhood, are enduring and resistant to change, and are ego-syntonic, meaning that they cannot comprehend any need to change their behavior or believe they have a problem. They lack insight and think other people should change.
Read: Broadening Our Understanding of Trauma: Why Context Matters
Cluster B includes paranoid,ย borderline,ย narcissistic,ย antisocial,ย and histrionic personality disorders. People with the first two disorders are driven by fear, fear of betrayal, and abandonment, respectively.
Narcissists and sociopaths are driven by a need for power over others. Theyโre less likely to seekย counseling because they would see it as a weakness and believe other people should change for them. Histrionic individuals are motivated to seek attention.
Telling someone that they have a personality disorder or that theyโre a highly defensive person will likely trigger their defensiveness and lead to an attack, or at minimum, more conflict. Itโs also pointless because they donโt believe that they have a problem.
Dealing With Aggressive People
While dealing with Highly Defensive People, employ the normal rules of conflict resolution; however, make some adjustments. For example, they usually are not interested in your feelings and may use them toย manipulateย you.
1. Gain awareness of who youโre dealing with
Observe theirย behavior and triggersย and know your own defenses and
2. Understand that theyโre thin-skinned and defensive.
This also means that what they say reflects their insecurity and is not a reflection on you. Itโs likely a projection of their inner world.ย Projectionย is a favorite defense of abusers. Therefore, detach and donโt take personally any criticism or demeaning remarks. This is not easy and requires self-esteem, but understanding HCP is the key. Learnย how to detach.
3. Avoid anything that can be taken as criticism.
These approaches escalate the conflict. With a borderline personality disordered person, avoid words that threatenย abandonment. They also like their emotional intensity mirrored to feel taken understood.
Read: Transforming Criticism into Wishes: A Recipe for Successful Conflict
4. Do not placate, make excuses
Try to convince them of your position or justify yourself. These approaches empower them. Instead, be assertive.
5. Express concern for their feelings.
6. Offer options
Offer options rather than only one alternative, so that they feel they have a choice.
7. Do not dwell on past behavior,
Focus on future solutions. Let go of the past.
8. Do let them know
Do let them know the negative impact of their behavior on you, the relationship, or other people. Usually, theyโre oblivious to how their aggression affects others.
9. Stay calm
Itโs generally advisable to stay calm; however, some individuals, such as those with borderline personality disorders, need to feel that the intensity of their emotions is understood by you matching their intensity. When youโre quiet, they might feel insulted or abandoned.
10. Setย boundariesย
Setย boundariesย on abusive behaviorย in a calm, concise, and firm tone. Be matter-of-fact and take a helpful, non-accusatory tone from the point of view that you want to help the person get what they want, but that their approach isnโt productive.
11. Carry out consequences if boundaries continue to be violated.
12. Avoid dealing with high conflict people.
Ask yourself why you would continue to expose yourself to pain, stress, and denigration.
Get my ebook,ย How To Speak Your Mind โ Become Assertive and Set Limits,ย and webinarย How to Be Assertive. For steps and scripts to setting boundaries with narcissists and difficult people, getย Dealing with a Narcissist: 8 Steps to Raise Self-Esteem and Set Boundaries with Difficult Peopleย or theย Narcissist Quit Kit.
ยฉ Darlene Lancer 2022
Written By: Darlene Lancer JD LMFT
Originally Appeared On: What is Codependency
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS)
What causes high conflict personality disorder?
It is believed that High Conflict personality is related to insecure attachment and childhood trauma. They have an inner war going on but externalize it out into the world.
Can a highly aggressive person change?
A highly aggressive person cannot comprehend any need to change their behavior or believe they have a problem. Highly conflicted people are stuck in their own attacking behavior and canโt focus on changing or resolving their behavior. But cognitive-behavioral therapy can be used to help a high-conflict person.
Can a person be addicted to conflict?
A conflict addict is a person who holds on to their emotional conflicts, instead of resolving them and blames others for their state. They tend to repeat their story of emotional pain to themselves and others, like a broken record to satisfy their addiction.
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